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6,8/10
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Richard Montañez qui, en tant que concierge de Frito Lay, a bouleversé l'industrie alimentaire en exploitant son héritage mexicain pour transformer les Flamin' Hot Cheetos.Richard Montañez qui, en tant que concierge de Frito Lay, a bouleversé l'industrie alimentaire en exploitant son héritage mexicain pour transformer les Flamin' Hot Cheetos.Richard Montañez qui, en tant que concierge de Frito Lay, a bouleversé l'industrie alimentaire en exploitant son héritage mexicain pour transformer les Flamin' Hot Cheetos.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Nommé pour 1 Oscar
- 7 victoires et 9 nominations au total
Carlos S. Sanchez
- Young Richard
- (as Carlos Sanchez)
Carlos Solórzano
- Young Lucky Montañez
- (as Carlos Solorzano)
Avis à la une
This movie is "based on a true story" but it's not entirely true. Richard Montanez rose from the bottom to white collar marketing without a formal education and was involved in the Los Angeles marketing of Sabrositas in the 1990s several years after Flamin' Hot Cheetos were invented by people with MBAs in the Midwest. There is only one former employee who agrees with Montanez' exaggerated version of events, saying that there were competing ideas for Flamin' Hots in different parts of the country as portrayed at one point in the film. But the film is utter fiction. Richard Montanez was actually promoted to machinist fairly quickly by Frito-Lay and was not a janitor for over a dozen years as portrayed in the film. Eva Longoria is guilty of overstating the oppression and racism that Montenez experienced in his first couple of decades at Frito-Lay.
In fact the movie seems weirdly determined to present Southern Californian Mexican culture as the bottom rung on the ladder, when anyone who actually lives in the Southwestern U. S. and/or is affiliated in any way with the Latinx community knows that there were successful middle-class Mexican and South American immigrants in the L. A. area as far back as the 1950s and 60s. They certainly weren't all barely literate gangsters as late as 1992.
However, Flamin' Hot is fun and light-hearted to watch, and I guess it sends a good message to underprivileged kids living in poor Mexican communities about believing in themselves and giving an example of a successful member of their own community. Your mileage may vary.
In fact the movie seems weirdly determined to present Southern Californian Mexican culture as the bottom rung on the ladder, when anyone who actually lives in the Southwestern U. S. and/or is affiliated in any way with the Latinx community knows that there were successful middle-class Mexican and South American immigrants in the L. A. area as far back as the 1950s and 60s. They certainly weren't all barely literate gangsters as late as 1992.
However, Flamin' Hot is fun and light-hearted to watch, and I guess it sends a good message to underprivileged kids living in poor Mexican communities about believing in themselves and giving an example of a successful member of their own community. Your mileage may vary.
Great little flick about one of the worlds most popular snack. Hot Cheetos popped up one day out of nowhere while I was in the 5th grade. They were everywhere and everyone was eating them. Leaving the familiar red stains everywhere unless you used the chop sticks but that was much later? Anyway, Eva Longoria did a great job making the movie flow. Keeping things light and entertaining. She did a great job with balancing the whole story with knowing when the scene had to be serious and when it could take those liberties to have some fun. Cast played well off of each other. Jesse García and Annie Gonzales were great together. Fun to see Tony Shalhoub, Dennis Haysbert, Matt Walsh, and Peter Diseth in this. Movie clocks in at 98 minutes but it really felt like not a single second was wasted. I did enjoy this flick with my very own bag of hot Cheetos cos why not? Good flick!
I needed to watch a feel-good, and it does its job as well as could be expected. Unfortunately, what I only discovered afterwards was that although the movie aspires to be a true story of going from being the underdog to the top, the entire thing is a fabrication, as documented by The Los Angeles Times. Montañes has publicly changed important details of the story over his lifetime, and even PepsiCo itself disputes that he had anything to do with Flamin' Hot Cheetos. Most importantly, Enrico was not even with the company at the time this happened, and Montañes was actually promoted to a machinist shortly after starting as a janitor.
On the basis of emotional sentiment this story checks the boxes by properly building up each sequence with just enough "hope" to maximize the most of its climax. There's a sense of relatability, not only in a product that is universally recognizable, but also in a character that we seem to know all too well in each of our own lives. The tone is light and though you receive a certain payoff toward the end, the reservation of critical moments throughout the rest of the film lingers as an aftertaste. We're entering the era of product films and whether the pieces for each story come from extraordinary roots or simply fall into place they all tend to feel the same. Jesse Garcia is an enjoyable screen presence who leads a unique Hulu project, and from what I've seen with his previous performances, he's only trending upward. I approached the film with a curiosity for an origin story that may or may not have been entirely dramatized, and walked away rooting for the aspirational spirit that is sometimes deeply embedded within each one of us.
There's a lot of buzz around whether Flamin' Hot tells a true story or not, but for me the accuracy doesn't really matter all that much. It's still a nice movie either way, albeit commercial (and it's not a documentary, c'mon).
Linda Yvette Chávez tells the tale of Flamin' Hot Cheetos through the lense of Richard Montañez's life. The plot generally surrounds his personal struggles in his career and subsequently the development and marketing of Flamin' Hot Cheetos. By the end you are left with a inspiring commentary about how no one is defined by a title. There's some good jokes sprinkled in, too.
Also, the movie does it's job as an ad well, so maybe have some Flamin' Hot Cheetos on hand.
Linda Yvette Chávez tells the tale of Flamin' Hot Cheetos through the lense of Richard Montañez's life. The plot generally surrounds his personal struggles in his career and subsequently the development and marketing of Flamin' Hot Cheetos. By the end you are left with a inspiring commentary about how no one is defined by a title. There's some good jokes sprinkled in, too.
Also, the movie does it's job as an ad well, so maybe have some Flamin' Hot Cheetos on hand.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesRichard Montañez's claim of inventing Flamin' Hot Cheetos has been disputed. According to a 2021 Los Angeles Times report, Flamin' Hot Cheetos were invented by a team of food professionals led by Lynne Greenfeld at Frito-Lay's headquarters in Plano, Texas, to compete with spicy snacks sold in inner-city mini-marts in the Midwest. Frito-Lay would neither confirm nor deny Montañez's account and told the Times, "None of our records show that Richard was involved in any capacity in the Flamin' Hot test market", but "Different work streams tackling the same product without interacting occasionally occurred in the past when divisions operated independently." Roger Enrico also did not become the CEO of Frito-Lay until 1991, after the product and brand had been developed. Enrico died in 2016 before the Times' report; his secretary said that Montañez's phone call with Enrico took place in 1993 to pitch Flamin' Hot Popcorn, two years after Flamin' Hot Cheetos were introduced. Frito-Lay did confirm that Montañez pitched several successful snacks developed for Latino customers while working as a machine operator, and that the film's account of Montañez ascending from working as a janitor to an executive is accurate.
- GaffesFood stamps were not called SNAP benefits in 1992. They were still called food stamps until the 2010s.
- Citations
Lonny Mason: You better pray for a miracle, Montanez. Because before this is over, one way or another, you won't have a job.
- Crédits fousThe Searchlight Pictures fanfare is played in a Mexican musical style.
- Bandes originalesLas Nubes
Written by Juan Hernandez Almaguer
Performed by Little Joe & La Familia
Published by San Antonio Music Publishers, Inc.
Courtesy of La Familia Enterprises, LLC (TDI Records)
By arrangement with The Orchard
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- How long is Flamin' Hot?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Flamin' Hot: El sabor que cambió la historia
- Lieux de tournage
- Albuquerque, Nouveau-Mexique, États-Unis(Richard's house, Neighborhood exteriors and basketball court and park.)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 39 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1
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